Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 08, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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    SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday. July 8, I94S
MEDFORD J$$TRIBUNE
Rud tna mil Tribune"
Dallr Ixcept Saturday
Published by
ii i j ! V'TIMfl m
. WSS'Vff St" PKon. SMI.
ROBIRT W. RUHL, BIW.
ERNEST R. OILSTHAP. Manager.
HERB GREY, Advertising Mir.
uff num STARCHER. Soe. Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mgr.
An Independent Newspaper.
Entered second class matter at
Medford, Oregon, under Art ox
March 3. 18':
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall In Advance
tally and Sunday-one ,('
Daily and Sunday lx month! 4 00
Dally and Sunday three mos. 2.10
Dally and Sunday one month.. 73
By Carrier In Advance Medford,
Ashland Central Point, Jackaon
ville. Cold Hill, Phnenlx. Talent, and
on motor routei:
Dally and Sunday one year.. 00
Dally and Sunday one month .75
All lerma cash In advance.
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Press Full Leased1 Wire
MEMBER or AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
I4....fl.lna Rnr.nttlva
WEST-HOLLIDAV COMPANY. INC.
Offices In New rorK unicago, tic
trolt, San Franclfco. Los Angelee, Se
attle, Portland. St. Louis, Atlanta.
Vancouver. B. C.
Ore c1o(N e,vC sFa'p c r
Publisher a r i o
Ye Smudge Pot
. Br Arthur Perry
Black Republican cherries are
now being picked. The other
variety has been picked for the
last 12 years, and are still plenti
ful and mad.
e
Lt. Col. Steve Nye who has
been in New Orleans, England,
and Belgium, since the war
started, is headed for his orch
ard, folks, boys, and fried chick
en a la North Dakota.
e e
Next Friday Is the 13th. It Is
the birthday of Jim (PurewateiO
Owen, and one of the Older
Girls.
e
E. Ulrlch, the Prospect mt.-
wm has been elected director
of the Prospect school district,
for a three year term. He also
served as umpire the year Pros
pect never lost a ball game.
e
The unearthly hole where for
merly stood the Commercial
Club edifice, has been copiously
filled with gravel and is. no
longer a "municipal horror1
Everybody now breathes easier,
and will not have to worry about
what the tourist and returned
soldier will think, and say. It
was an Espee project.
e
Summer colds are quits nu
merous. Several have been bot
tled up with them.
Experts now report; the won
drous weed-killer reported last
spring is not as murderous as
first believed. Squirted on Cana
dian thistles south of town, lt
turned a fence post green, and
liquidated three rows of turnips.
e e
Statesmen In Washington, D.
C, have taken steps to get the
well-known butter shortage out
of warehouses, where it has been
hiding, and onto the pancakes
and bread of the masses, without
further ado or red stamps.
The song of the threshing ma.
chine Is again heard In the val
ley. When something gets out of
whack, the attendants don't sing,
e e e
Old Sol Is busy putting sugar
in trie pears, the same not com
lng under OPA restrictions, rules
ana regimentations.
Gene Chlldcrs, a well known
local landlubber, now sojourn
ing within a stone's throw of the
broad blue Pacific, was over In
mia-wccK on biz.
e
H. Hopkins, the deputy presi
dent for 12 years, quit last week
for a rest. Before he could relax,
he took a $25,000 per year Job.
Peoria Bill Gates has paved
nis panting lot on Central ave.
This Is a great Improvement and
will keep down the dust and
weeds.
e e e
A number of venerable vehi
cles have been refurbished and
look like new. At least one of
the lot looks new enough to be
new.
e e e
Picnics are the order of the
day. Ants are as plentiful as be
fore Pearl Harbor. The usual
numbci' of male wearers of
white, starched pants, seated
themselves in the pics with red
Juices.
e e
H. Flcwhcr, the demon baker
who has been in Italy, the Dubb
watson boy Edd of the Pacific
theater, and the Jens Jensen boy
John, one of B&O Patton's crow,
are due back In the local midst.
There will be an eclipse of the
sun at 8:28 a.m. tomorrow. Out
side of farmers who have turned
In half a day's work by that time,
few will see the event, If not too
busy to look towards the east
Us luu Tribune Want Ada.
War Breeds War
The Senate Military Affairs committee has oked
the universal service proposal after considerable
debate.
According to report General Eisenhower's vigorous
endorsement was a potent factor in the result.
And it will be of course in the congress, as win the
testimony of General Marshall and other top military
men. lop military men are always ior universa.
service that is their business.
Which only goes to show one of the worst things
about war, war breeds war.
e e e
VES every war makes it just so much harder to pre
A vent another war. For war grows by what it feeds
on. War strengthens the military habit, it adds to the
prestige and power of the professional military men.
It weakens all the forces of peace.
So unless all signs fail, this country will now do
what it has never done before in all its history, adopt
UNIVERSAL military service, as a permanent policy
of this free democratic country, in time of peace !
IN fact such action will mean, following the example
of an imperialistic and militaristic Europe, which
theoretically at least we engaged in this contact to
destroy.
It will also mean the complete and cynical repudi
ation of the United Nations Security conference just
ended at San Francisco.
For what other interpretation could there be for
this country, or any other, to maintain the greatest
army and navy in all its history costing literally bil-
10ns every year, and during peace time, n there
were any real confidence, either in high quarters or
among a majority of the people, that the formation of
a second League of Nations, had made war less likely
rather than as likely or more so?
tF course there is still a chance that this effort to
transform this country permanent! into a mili
taristic one will fail. But it a slim one. Those who don't
believe such action either wise or necessary will have
to get busy and do some intensive work, if the flood
tide of militarism created by thi&and world war is
ever to be stemmed. R.W.R.
Could Have Been Better
We have referred before to Senator Vandenberg's
speech in the Senate favoring the ratification of the
United Nations Security Pact.
It was, all in all, a very good speech. At the conclu
sion of it the entire Senate rose and paid the speaker
a deserved tribute.
But the speech had the weakness of so many politi
cal speeches by members of the American congress,
it was too rhetorical and too partisan. By partisan, we
mean it gave an- overly favorable, unduly optimistic
picture, rather than a realistic and objective one.
ee.ee
THERE were three members of the congress, two
Senators and one Congressman, representing the
United States at San Francisco, and throughout the
gathering that was the failing of them all, Senator
Vandenberg less than the other two however. They
couldn't get over the habit of delivering POLITICAL
speeches.
Which reminds us of the criticism of Queen Vic
toria regarding Gladstone that he always talked to
her, as if he were addressing the House of Commons.
e e e e
HOWEVER to return to Senator Vandenberg's
OjJtCV.Ie
Here is one of several examples of what might be
termed the oratorical fly in the altogether soothing
and salubrious senatorial ointment We quote:
"I particularly have In mind the new emphasis which
Is put upon International law, as an institution for human
service, substituting orderly justice for the Jungle creed that
might makes right. I also have In mind the certainty that
with this organized vigilance which we here mobilize, no
, Axis Powers nor any counterpart thereof shall ever rise
again."
"Shall NEVER rise again I"
That takes in a lot of time as well as territory. And
not only any resurgence of the Axis powers but any
counterpart which would only have to mean any
organized military might that might be employed in
aggression, in the future.
THE plain truth is, that as the charter is now drawn
"this organized vigilance" will be powerless
against any nation or group of nations, if any one
of the five great powers, should themselves be in
volved, or if any one of them for any reason, should
not favor opposition.
AS for the "new emphasis on international law" the
new World Court will have no jurisdiction
WHATEVER, unless the parties to the dispute desire
it, appeal to the court is not compulsory but optional. 1
In short it is pretty hard to conceive of any nation, '
planning armed conquest at any time in the future,
and ASKING that its case be heard before a judicial
tribunal ! !
And if no nation in the future does plan armed
conquest, of course there will be no war, and (obvi-:
ously) no need of any court or any League action to j
prevent it. j
All this, we grant, is looking at the hole in the :
doughnut of the Michigan senator's effort. It was a '
good speech and undoubtedly increased favorable 1
support in the Upper House. !
Our only point is it would have been even stronger
and more effective if the grandiose claims and hyper-!
bolic verbal adornments, had been eliminated and an
accurate appraisal of the charter's virtues, rather than
a highly exaggerated one had been presented. R.W.R. j
Your Health and It's Care
By DR. WILLIAM BRADY. M.D.
Readers should address Inquiries toi Dr. William
265 CI Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif.
Brady.
NON SURGICAL DRAINAGE OF GALL BLADDER
The use of a tube (called duo
denal tube to distinguish it from
the larger, shorter tube called
stomach) pass.
ed through the
mouth into the
stomach, and
then on into
the duodenum
to place direct
ly in the duo
denum where
the bile Is nor
mally eject e d
from the gall
bladder, a sal
ine peptone
Dr. Brady solution which
stimulates the emptying of the
gall-bladder, was given the name
non-surgical drainage of the gall
bladder by Lyon.
A similar procedure, without
the tube, was described by
Knight under the same term:
non-surgical drainage of the gall
bladder.
First you must have chronic
cholecystitis or gall bladder
trouble, and we don't mind at
the moment whether you have
any gallstones or not, just so
there is no question about your
claim of "intestinal indigestion"
and your "gas attacks" being
due to the gall-bladder trouble.
Not that there is anything dis
tinctive or exclusive about hav
ing chronic cholecystitis (with or
without stones), for one out of
every five persons past 35 has
it. about four per cent of the
major operations in large hos
pitals are for gall-bladder
trouble, although only about six
per cent of patients with chronic
gall - bladder trouble require
operation. The other 94 per
cent worry along on diet, medi
cine belching, worrying about
the gas "pressing on the heart."
Dr. Knight's gall - bladder
drainage is taken thus: Go with
out food or water for four hours.
Lie on right side and do not
change position for two hours.
During this time take a tame-
spoonful of the medicine (de
scribed below) every 15 minutes
for six doses. Take no liquids
during the two hours (other than
the medicine. Thirty minutes
after the last dose Oi the medi
cine eat a slice of well buttered
toast if butter is scarce in your
neck of the woods oleo is Just as
good in fact I prefer oleo for
my bread or toast, thank you. If
you don't care for oleo "or butter
on toast you may eat the yolks
of two eggs with the toast. You
must have one or the other, even
If you don't eat the toast.
That's all. Have another go
at it a month or two from now,
if you- like. Results may be
judged by relief of discomfort
and the number und character
of evacuations that follow.
If the drainage is unsuccessful
the fat (in the butter , oleo or
egg yolk) may cause vigorous
gall bladder contraction and
severe pain. I'm sorry, but you
had better see your doctor about
that.
The medicine is a simple mix
ture. Three Ingredients requir
ed, namely, three fluid ounces of
elixir of lactated pepsin, one
fluid ounce of glycerin and four
ounces of Epsom salts. Dissolve
all the salts the elixir will dis
solve by pouring in a spoonful
at a time and shaking up to see
if the liquid remains clear.
When some salts remains undis
solved in bottom of the vial, add
the glycerin, and you're ready
to begin the drainage operation.
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Co- His
tory from the files of the Mai)
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years
ago,
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
July 8. 1925
(It Was Monday)
Weyerhaueser kidnap jury
chosen.
Violent storm hits New York
City.
Plan advanced to group state
capitol buildings on Willamette
University campus.
Partly cloudy.
45 degrees.
High 74, low
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
Irregular Pulse
My heart has been skipping beats.
Doctors lav it la a nervous condition.
Shots do not cause any change. I am
M hlnnrf nrMturi . . . (Mrs. V. A. O.)
Answer It will at least do no harm
to try taking twe grains of quinine
sulfate In tablet, pill or capsule, after
food, twice daily for several weeks.
Inherit of Psychosis
Girl seems normal. Her father la in
state hospital for the insane. Is insan
ity Hereditary wouia cniiamn uu.,
to this girl be likely to be defective?
(M. C. J.)
Answer Only a physician who
knows the nature of the father's
trouble can give you a sound opinion.
Vita
Please define vlte and give a com
plete list of all of your monographs
and booklets. (C. R. D.)
Answer Send stamped envelope
oearlng your address and ask for
booklet on Vite.
Copyright 1945 by John F. Dllle Co.)
THIRTY FOUR YEARS
AGO TODAY
i July 8. 1911
(It was Thursday)
Forest road in Crater Lake
park completed.
On the Radio Chain
STATION 8
Chain affiliation and where they
are on the dial.
KAI.E (.MBS) mo, Portland; HEX
(ABO 1 190, Portland KGO (ABC)
10, San Francisco; KOW (NBC)
620 Portland. KJR (ABC) 1000
Seattle KNX (IBS) i070. Los An
geles; KOA (NBC) 850, Denver;
KOIN (CBS) 910 Portland, KOMO
(NIIC 950. Seattle; KI'O (NBC) 680.
San Francisco; KSL (CBS) 1160. Sail
Lake llty
Time Shown It PWT.
Sunday
3:00 d. m. Frances Lanffford Show.
NBC; Meditation Board, MBS; Top of
ine marK wnn -viirgo. aui;.
5 '30 p. m. Tommy Dorsey and Com.
pany. NBC; Art Baker, CBS; Jerry
wsyne snow, ahc.
45 p. m. Gabriel Heatter, MBS.
8 -S3 p. m. News CBS.
6:00 p. m. Merry Go-Round. NBC:
Walter Wlnchell. ABC; Radio Reader's
Digest, cub; steel Horizons, MBS.
6:19 p. m. Lotiella Parsons, ABC.
6.20 p. m. Hollywood Mystery Time,
ABC
6:30 p. m. Star Theatre, CBS; Amer
ican Album of Familiar Music. NBC;
Music. MBS.
7 00 p. m. Hour of Charm, NBC;
Take It or Leave It, CBS; The Life of
Riley. ABC; Brownstone Theatre,
MBS.
7:IS p. m. Heler. Hayes, MBS.
7 30 p. m. I Was There. CBS; Meet
Me ot Parky's, NBC; One Foot In Hea
ven, ABC.
8:00 p. m. Crime Doctor. CBS.
8:15 p. m. Raymond Moley, ABC.
8 29 o. m. Song of the Week, CBS.
8:30 p. m. Standard Hour, NBC;
Quiz Kids. ABC; Blondle, CBS; Mur
der Is My Hobhv. MBS.
9 DO p. m. Bill I.ancc, CBS; Glen
Hardv, MBS; Sam Hnyes, News. ABC.
9 15 p. m. Rex Miller. MBS.
9 30 d. m. Francis Craig and Or
chestra NBC; Tommy Dorsey Orches
tra. CBS: Casa Client, ABC.
lo-oo p m. News, nhc; in Focus.
ABC; Air Force Time. MBS.
10:30 p. m. Tommy Dorsev Show.
NBC; Trans-Atlantic Call. CBS
10 45 p. m. Orchestra, ABC; Chet
Stewart Orchestra MBS.
11:00 p. m. News, ABC; sinrninetta,
MBS: Mmlc in the Night. NBC: Or
chestra, CBS.
Monday
5:00 n. m. OK. For Release, NBC;
Terry and Pirates. ABC; News. MBS;
Milton Charles, CBS.
5-13 p m. Dick Tracy, ABC; Super
man. MBS: Belly and Bob, NBC.
5 30 p. m. Voice of Firestone, NBC:
News, CBS: Jack Armstrong, ABC;
Tom Mix, MBS.
5:49 p. m. News, CBS: Rosa Rio,
ABC: Night News Wire. MBS.
6:00 p. m. Hoagy Carmtchael, NBC;
Bmilah. CBS; Pan American Concert,
ABC: Gabriel Heatter, MBS.
6:30 p m. Rise Stevens snow, NBC:
Spotlight Bands, MBS. Listen to a
Story of the Sea. CBS.
7:00 p. m. Screen Guild Flayers,
CBS. Contented Hour, NBC; Tokyo
Calling, auc.
7:15 p. m. Lowell Thomas. MBS.
7-30 p. m. Dr. 1. Q . NBC: Thanks to
the Yanks, CBS; Lone Ranger, MBS;
Reunion 0. S. A., ABC.
R OD n m. SuDDer Club. NBC: Lum
and Abner, ABC; Michael Shayne,
MBS.
S IS p. m. Hedda Hopper, CBS;
Fleetwood Lawton, NBC.
r.-io iv m. Cavalcade of America.
NBC: Hawthorne House, ABC; Man
Named Jordan, CBS.
9:00 p. m. Blind Date, ABC; News,
Glen Hardy, MBS: The Whistler, CBS;
Telephone Hour. NBC.
9.15 p. m. Salute to our Heroes,
MRS
9:30 p. m. Vox Pop, CBS; Tomor
row's World, NBC; Green Hornet,
ABC; Jimmy Fldler, MBS.
9:49 p. m. Lee Sims, Pianist, NBC.
10:00 p. m. News, NBC; Fulton
Lewis. MBS; Chaille Chan. ABC.
10:15 p. m. Sherlock Holmes, MBS;
On Our Bandstand, NBC.
10:30 p. m. Sweetheart SwingUme.
NBC
11:00 p. m. News. ABC: Orchestra.
NBC: Orchestra. CBS.
Rev. Roscoe Wilson
In Charge of Park
Religious Service
The Rev. Roscoe Wilson of the
Church of God. in cooperation
with musicians from the Church
of the Brethren, will be in
charge of the Union Vesper
services conducted by the Med
ford Ministerial association in
the City Park at 4:30 p. m. to
day. An added feature of this
summer season s program is the
use of a public address system.
making it possible lor a larger
number of people to hear. John
Eby is again conducting the
music.
A committee, headed by Milo
Clifton Ross, president of the
association, met at the Friends
parsonage Friday evening and
perfected the schedule of the
rest of the season, which will
continue to Sept. 2. Pastors
and musicians of some 15 co
operating congregations will
participate lrflthe activities.
A large crowd attended the
first service last Sunday.
More than $4,827,000,000 of
public works have been pro
posed for postwar construction
in California by federal, state
and local governments.
Sen. Huey Ljpg now In com
plete control of Louisiana affairs.
Donkey baseball game at sen
ior high field tonight.
AAA wheat payments boosted
four cents per bushel.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
July 8, 1925
(It Was Wednesday) (
Secretary of Interior Works on
visit to state calls Gov. Pierce to
Portland for conference on land
problems. Will visit eastern part
of state.
Central Pt. Church
Daily Bible School
Will Open Monday
Central Point, July 7 Dally
vacation Bible school will begin
at the Church of Christ, July 9,
under direction of Miss Iysle
Gregory, Mrs. Carl Hover and
Mrs. E. Gilbert Cays. Others
assisting with the school will be
Mrs. Wm. Foley, Mrs. W. H.
Lacey, Mrs. Chas. Wellman,
Helene McDowell, Joy Bigham,
Gertrude and Mary Pence, Mary
Jane Mathews, Helen Wilson,.
Ina Adams, Joyce Fraley of
Medford, and . Gilbert Cays,
minister.
All boys and girls, four years
of age and over are cordially in
vited. Classes begin at 9 a. m.
and close at 11:49.
Culminating the day school
will be a program on the eve
ning of July 20, followed by
special treat in the form of a
picnic on July 21. Mrs. John
Bohnert is chairman of the com
mittee in charge of the picnic.
WASHING MACHINES
REPAIRED
Parts !t Service on All Makes
B. & B. WASHER SHOP
40B E. Main Phone 5302
POISON OAK?
Try a bottle ot ZEMACOL
Vuu musi be saiisMpfi or vitui mnney
cheerfully refunded Gel a bntUt to
day 11 WKRTKKN lit It I FT
J
Fair. High 95, low 48 degrees.
Craters frolic at Rogue Elk,
and eat fried chicken.
Barney Baruch gives $250,000
for peace plan that will take
profits out of war.
Mrs. George M. Roberts wins
ladies golf handicap match.
Fifteen special trains to pass
through city in next three
weeks.
Over 700 die of heat In east.
County court votes $200 to re
move stumps from road between
Trail and Prospect.
Fair.
grees.
High 100, low 56 de-
COMMUNICATIONS
Letters to (he Kdltiif must beat
the name and address ot the writer
althitUKh the use nl a pen-name nr
initials tor puhlirattun Is permis
slhle lhe Mall Tribune reserves
the right t edit all letters with a
view to clarity and condensation
Help Wanted By Housewives
To the editor, Your July 3
paper states: Canning sugar ex
hausted here.
Does that mean no sugar for
canning and our board doing
nothing about it?
Will our school1 lunches of jam
sandwiches consist of two pieces
of bread jammed together? Sugar
is needed for successful home
canning.
The housewife is not wasteful
but it sure "gets her goat" to
see fruit go to waste because
she cannot have sugar. The
Chamber of Commerce and other
Jackson county organizations
who boost our fruit industry
might help us housewives. It is
thought.
DELLA A. LITTLEFIELD,
Shady Cove, Ore.
The Book-of-the-Month Club
Why not join now, right here
. in town, through our bookstore,
at no additional expense!
AS a book-reader, you know about the Book-of-the-Month
jCUD s service how it effectively keeps you from missing
the new, eagerly talked-about best-sellers that are published each
month. And you know about the great money-saving involved:
that for every two books-of-the-month you buy (beoks you'd be
buying anyway!) you receive one of the Gub's valuable book
dividends frti.
So why not join the dub now? Through a special arrangement
with the Club itself, we are abls to give you full membership
privileges plus out personal attention at no extra cost
You pay no yearly sum to be a member of the Book-of-the-Month
Club. You pay nothing, except for the books you buy;
And you do not have to take a book every month. Ask us about
this service today.
You Can Begin Your Subscription Now,
With This Double Selection
UP FRONT By Bill Mauldin
and
THE WORLD, THE FLESH AND
FATHER SMITH By Bruce Marshall
COMBINED PRICE TO MEMBERS
$3.00
and
receive
FREE, as a new member
MY FRIEND FLICKA
and
THUNDERHEAD
By MARY O'HARA
Illustrated by John Steuart Curry
Retail Price $5.75 In Two Volumes-Boxed)
SWEM'S
BOOK O GIFT SHOP
BRIGHTEN UP fURNITURI WOODWORK TOYS
With SHtRWIN-WlLLIAMS
EN AMELOID aa
On Coal f nomel hIIC
WW
PINT
ill
Easy to us . . . rovers with one
coat no brush marks t
many gorgeous colors.
Sherwin Williams Paints
Hubbard -Bros.. Inc.
Phone 2189 Main and Riverside
VARNISH for FLOORS FURNITURE WOODWORK
SHtRWIN-WlLLIAMS
i ii ID-Hat winiiieii
lilMll-liVI IHIilllalll
Douti(isndprotccrt.Rtjiit C
chippinjcscuffinf ndferatch
Ins. Will set turn whit.
158
1 M
FOR VICTORY
BUY WAR
BONDS
O
F'
L;-.-f!;?'
.aWii-i ii i rrj
Recapped Tires
WORK for
VICTORY
Keep the wheels of your
car turning toward vic
tory. Drive in today and
let us inspect your tires.
If they need recapping,
we'll know and we'll do
an expert job for theiong
est possible mileage.
Don't wait until it's too
late. Drive in today keep
your car rolling and help
ave rubber and gasoline.
OLDER TIRE EXCHANGE
HOME OF FEAR-PROOF RECAPPING
8th and Riverside